The station was launched on October 25, 1953, by Sudbury businessmen George Miller,
Jim Cooper and Bill Plaunt. It was the first privately owned television station to launch in Canada, and only the fourth television station overall after
CBC Television's owned-and-operated stations
CBLT in
Toronto,
CBMT in
Montreal and
CBOT in
Ottawa. Its original call sign was CKSO-TV. The station was a CBC affiliate, receiving programs by
kinescope until a
microwave relay system linked the station to Toronto in 1956. The station originally broadcast only from 7 to 11 p.m., but by the end of its first year in operation it was on the air from 3:30 p.m. to midnight. The station was owned by the
Sudbury Star along with CKSO radio (AM 790, now
CJRQ at FM 92.7). The newspaper was sold to
Thomson Newspapers in 1955, but the paper's former local owners retained the radio and television stations under the corporate name CKSO Ltd. The company name was changed to Cambrian Broadcasting by 1965.
Reaffiliation with CTV In 1970, four separate companies simultaneously applied for new stations in Sudbury:
J. Conrad Lavigne, who owned the existing CBC affiliate
CFCL-TV in
Timmins, and Hyland Broadcasting, which owned the existing CBC affiliate
CJIC-TV in
Sault Ste. Marie, each applied for a
rebroadcast transmitter in Sudbury to transmit their existing programming, predicated on the assumption that CKSO would then switch its affiliation to CTV; the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation itself applied for its own
owned-and-operated station in the city, also predicated on the same assumption; and a fourth company, North Star Broadcasting, applied to launch a new CTV affiliate. The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) rejected all four of the original applications on the grounds that as Sudbury was the only city in the region large enough to support two competing television stations, all of the original applications would have effectively shut down any path for CTV service to ever be extended to Timmins or
North Bay; even the mere addition of rebroadcasters of Sudbury's new CTV station would itself destroy the viability of the existing CBC stations in the smaller cities unless they were
also paired up to a sister station in Sudbury. CKSO thus disaffiliated from the CBC to join CTV in 1971. As a result, the CRTC approved a full merger into the
MCTV twinstick. and since the stations no longer had common ownership the television station adopted the new call sign CICI. At this time, the Timmins repeater was converted into a new standalone station,
CITO-TV. In 1981, an Ontario provincial court case against the station, for allegedly failing to satisfy its
Canadian content requirements in the 1979–80 season, briefly had the effect of nullifying the entire policy; the judge ruled that because the federal Broadcast Act defined a station as the holder of a licence issued under the Radio Act of 1967, but the Canadian content regulations were set down in a
later revision of the Broadcast Act, a station was not bound by the regulation as it wasn't present in the 1967 edition. The ruling was subsequently overturned on appeal. In 1990, the stations were acquired by
Baton Broadcasting. Baton bought full control of CTV in 1997, making CICI a fully
owned-and-operated station of the network. CKNC was sold to the CBC in 2002, ceasing operations and becoming a full-time rebroadcaster of CBLT in Toronto. ==Famous people==